193 Wis. 403 | Wis. | 1927
In the first error assigned it is claimed by defendant’s counsel that there is no evidence of the delivery
It is next contended by defendant’s counsel that there is no evidence of the approval and acceptance of the bond by the plaintiff. Here again we call attention to the fact that the bond was duly executed; the court found that it was delivered ; and the evidence also shows that the plaintiff designated the bank as its legal depository. In the absence of any evidence to the contrary, the acceptance and approval of the bond follows as a necessary and logical inference. 9 Corp. Jur. 120.
In the third assignment of error it is claimed that notice as required by the statutes and by the bond was not given to any surety outside of the defendant. The court found that due notice was given to all of the sureties. No exception was made or filed with respect to this finding, and the same is therefore conclusive upon the defendant. But if we assume that the only notice of default was given to the defendant, and that he was the only person upon whom demand was made, the failure to give notice to the other sureties does
The defendant further contends that no moneys were deposited in the bank by the school district, either upon the day when the bond went into effect or thereafter; that the amount of $2,275 of principal on deposit in the bank at the time of its failure had been so on deposit for a long time prior to the execution and delivery of. the bond; in fact, at a time prior to the enactment of the law in question. The provision of. the bond applicable to this assignment of error reads as follows:
“Now, therefore, if the said Farmers & Merchants Bank shall well and truly account for and pay to the said obligee, or to its order, on demand, all funds so deposited with it as such depository, with interest if any, as may be agreed upon, and agreeably to the terms of such deposits as being payable on demand or at any particular timé, and shall well and truly perform all other obligations and conditions now or hereafter imposed by law on its part to be kept and performed, then, and in that event, this obligation to be void; otherwise to be and remain in full force and effect.”
Had the plaintiff, when the bond went into .effect, withdrawn the balance then on deposit in the bank and had instantly re-deposited the amount, no question could be raised upon the subject of liability. Such action on the part of the school district or its treasurer would have amounted to a mere idle ceremony. The error assigned is extremely technical. When the legislature of North Dakota saw fit to enact
Furthermore, the evidence discloses that the defendant was a stockholder and director of the bank, and its president. The other sureties on the bond were also interested therein, ■"in one capacity or another. Under these circumstances the sureties did not stand upon the same basis as do gratuitous sureties, and are not entitled to the ordinary protection that the law affords to gratuitous private sureties, for they occupy a position very similar to that occupied by surety companies receiving pay for the protection offered and furnished in a surety bond.
By the Court. — The judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.